• magnetosphere
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    71 year ago

    I honestly did not know that. I’ve been wondering how, for example, UAW workers can afford to strike for weeks.

    • @[email protected]
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      61 year ago

      The downside is that you won’t get paid as much as you would working. My union pays $200 a day to anyone on a picket line, but as a strike goes on, the money starts to run out.

      Fortunately it hasn’t come to that for us.

      • @Elivey
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        31 year ago

        Better than getting nothing during that time! $200/day for me would be a lot of money.

        • @[email protected]
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          41 year ago

          My local went on strike once in 2019, it lasted one day and everyone who picketed got $200.

          Last year we threatened to strike, had an authorization vote, but our signatory contractors association wanted nothing to do with it and we basically got everything we asked for with no work stoppage.

          The deal in my part of the country is that what with the CHIPS Act, there’s literally billions of dollars on the table and our signatory contractors can’t afford to get bogged down in labor disputes.

          The upshot is that it leaves the unions sitting pretty since they can’t access these incredibly lucrative contracts without using highly-trained union labor.

          There’s more to do with EMRs and the like, but I won’t bore you with the details.